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Academy of Outcasts

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A brand new fantasy world from Larry Correia, bestselling author of Monster Hunter International!

All Oz Carnavon ever wanted was to become a master mage.
Except, to do so requires the natural gifts or wealth necessary to secure an appointment to one of the prestigious magical academies in the Core City at the center of the seven realms. Oz had neither.

He was born without magical talent, serving in the elemental plane of fire, a nightmarish hellscape of treacherous lava and vicious monsters, where life is cheap, and escape is rare. But Carnavons never give up.

When Oz fakes his death to get out of his family’s contract and crosses the Nexus gate to sneak into the Core, everything seems to be going according to plan… Until he gets blamed for an assassination attempt on the fire realm’s ambassador.

Now, Oz must become a fugitive in a vast magical city, while trying to earn a place among the magical academies which have nothing but disdain for his kind.

And the clock is ticking, because in one week, the most dangerous wizard in the realm of fire is coming to track him down and drag him back to hell.

Experience this epic new saga from LARRY CORREIA, award-winning author of Monster Hunter International and Saga of the Forgotten Warrior. This progression fantasy epic features a D&D-inspired setting split by portals into elemental realms, slow-growth power progression, magic academies, and unforgettable characters!

339 pages, Paperback

First published October 7, 2025

1314 people are currently reading
6090 people want to read

About the author

Larry Correia

124 books4,422 followers
Larry Correia (born 1977) is the New York Times bestselling author of the Monster Hunter International series, the Grimnoir Chronicles, and the thriller Dead Six.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 152 reviews
Profile Image for Booksblabbering || Cait❣️.
2,094 reviews848 followers
October 29, 2025
Portal fantasy, kind of?

Ozwald is a miner in the deadly fiery world of Fogo. He aims to escape his indentured servitude by becoming a wizard and being accepted into one of the acclaimed academies by the Core - the height of civilisation where gates to all kinds of worlds connect. Despite the fact he is a laughable ranked one self-taught wizard.
Things become more tense when Ozwald’s faked death wasn’t believed and he is being accused of murder and theft on top of that.

First of all, I disagree with the comparisons (which is a major reason I picked this up).
Deadly Education - There is barely any academy setting as Oz keeps getting turned away.
A Darker Shade of Magic - The portal fantasy is more interesting as different worlds represented by different elements (ergo, the different magic types) are connected by gates known as the Nexus. Apart from that, there is no similarity.

I enjoyed the inventiveness of the world. You have many different types of people and creatures. The usual: elves, orcs, gnomes, lizards; but also water dwelling, meat-eating creatures.

I did notice an overuse of exclamation marks for sentences that should be full stops that kept making me backtrack and reread to figure out what I had missed.

At the heart of this is a protagonist who is trying to get by with only his hard work and wits. An idealistic and loyal hero may be overdone, but there is a reason this archetype is so common.
The friendships are heartwarming. Outcasts coming together to stand up for the little guy.

“I think we just formed an illicit underground magical academy. You’re our instructor of earth magic now.”
Krachma snorted at that, rolled over, and went back to sleep.


This is definitely a setting up book and I would be curious to see where it goes.

Physical arc gifted by Aethon books.

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Profile Image for Jonathan Koan.
882 reviews870 followers
October 7, 2025
Larry Correia is becoming quite the renaissance writer, able to write everything from Epic Fantasy to B-movie horror. This book combines elements of D&D, Sanderson, Progression Fantasy, and Science Fiction worldbuilding and turns it into an entirely entertaining story. I was hooked for the entire book!

First of all, this book blends genres in a fun way. It has a very difinitive magic system that a modern Fantasy would have, but it's worldbuilding regarding the planets and the "core" are very Sci-Fi inspired. Its very much how Sanderson is able to write heavy magic systems and sci-fi worldbuilding. The key difference is that Larry Correia wastes no time in the minutiae and the story has incredibly brisk pacing.

The plot of this book is really engaging, as our intrepid hero tries to escape a life of poverty and servitude and strike it out in the big city, but he faces adversity constantly. This is absolutely not an over-powered character, as he has to work extra hard for what he gets.

We also have a great cast of characters. The main character (Oz Carnavon) is great to follow, but we also follow Trax (who is kind of comedic relief and is absolutely delightful!). Azarin is the female companion with a will-they-won't-they dynamic with Oz. And the antagonists who get in Oz's way were all written competently and I really got frustrated with them. In a good way.

The action is very fast and excellently written as well.

I appreciated how Larry kept the story moving, and when he explored the deeper themes about classism and capitalism, he never really felt preachy or even like he was stopping the story. It felt very organic.

I've seen the book compared to "Guardians of the Galaxy", and if you take out the excessive humor from the Guardians movies, this book absolutely has similar elements to it. It very much is a blend of Mistborn and Guardians of the Galaxy (credit the Reformed Reader for that comparison).

I do have one criticism of the book, but its not actually with the writing at all, but rather with the production of the book. My cover kept changing between font sizes. One chapter might be larger font, another chapter might be incredibly small font. It kept changing back and forth and was distracting and disorienting. I hope Aethon can fix that for subsequent printings.

Overall, I loved this book. I was hooked throughout, thought that it nailed everything it needed to, and I am so excited to read book 2 in May 2026. This really is one of my favorite reads of the year. 9.7 out of 10!
Profile Image for The Reformed Reader.
131 reviews95 followers
October 6, 2025
Mistborn meets Guardians of the Galaxy!

This was a roller coaster in narrative form. It was an excellent thrill ride that had twists and turns where I thought I had the story pinned down, then Larry would hit us with another curve that I didn't see coming.

And just like a good thrill ride, this story was FAST. PACED. The first few chapters were that proverbial initial, slow climb, then around chapter 5, you peer over the edge right before you are plummeting into this dynamic story of a motley crew who are thrust into a mystery at breakneck speeds.

The characters are extraordinary. Trax Bloodtrail is genuinely one of my favorite characters of all time. He was absolutely hilarious. Each character felt nuanced and unique enough that the reader would be able to identify who was speaking without any indicators, yet they felt familiar, especially for those who had had that ragtag group of friends.

The setting is boundless. Without going into spoilers, there are portals used in this world that lead to a variety of landscapes that are vastly different from each other. It's almost as if the characters are Larry's favorite toys and he is able to throw them into a new area with new challenges that are both environmental and circumstantial. This is gives Larry an infinite playground for these characters, and I will absolutely be along for the ride!

Finally, the plot isn't something revolutionary, and he leans into some of the tropes that we love, but he was able to spin it in a distinctive way. You have that primary story while you can see the greater plot that is the undercurrent of the series.

For anyone that loves Guardians of the Galaxy, Dungeons & Dragons, Mistborn, or really anyone that has decent tastes at all......you're going to LOVE. THIS. BOOK. This is an EXCELLENT book to get someone hooked on fantasy. A HUGE thank you to @aethonbooks for sending me an ARC and allowing me to dive into this story early. This is my favorite Larry Correia novel that I've read so far and I can't wait for the next one!
Profile Image for Spaced Out Reads.
69 reviews32 followers
October 12, 2025
INCREDIBLY FUN. Cosy meets DCC & D&D?!

I’ve been reading a lot of big epic, dense series this year and some times my brain needs a break. Sometimes I need cosy, funny and whimsical, but I still want, action and epic fantasy.

Academy of Outcasts delivered exactly what I was looking for, a very magical setting of different worlds/realms joined by portals. A slave doing everything he can to become a mage and a rag tag band of misfits.

It’s a little goofy in spots and sometimes how our main character keeps going is a bit ridiculous but overall this was a fun time. Paced out to perfection with small chapters to keep you saying “one more” and likeable characters you want to cheer for with a gripping plot. I’m sad that we only have one book out currently, this is a progression fantasy I want to binge and will certainly be continuing!!
Profile Image for Todd.
2,260 reviews8 followers
October 9, 2025
Another masterpiece from the mind of Larry Correia, creator of the Grimnoir, Monster Hunter International and Saga of the Forgotten Warrior series.

Oz is a young man who is an indentured servant working as a laborer on a volcanic planet. After being saved from sure death by a mage his dream is to one day be trained in a magic academy.

Stuff happens (no spoilers) and as he seeks entry into one of the academies to no avail he makes some friends along the way. Oz is persistent, not too magically talented and a good friend.

There's plenty of fun and humor, with Oz serving as a straight man for most of it.
Profile Image for Jordy Rousse.
77 reviews56 followers
December 6, 2025
What a great read.
I loved the magic system and the determination Oz had to learn magic. His adventure is original and keeps you on the edge of your seat not wanting to put the book down! Also FANTASTIC side characters.
Trax is a blast to read!
Looking forward to book 2!
Profile Image for Jay Collins.
1,631 reviews15 followers
October 25, 2025
3.5 stars , okay for the most part. Almost 4 stars but a little short. Mc is likable, other characters as well. Story is okay and I liked that it got clued up well.
Profile Image for John Brown.
572 reviews69 followers
did-not-finish
December 3, 2025
The thing about progression fantasy is it’s always YA and I think that’s the main thing that keeps me from enjoying it. I like stories with more grit and less corn-ball quotes.

I think if you like Phil Tucker or The Wandering Inn you’ll like this .
Profile Image for Felicia.
317 reviews9 followers
September 13, 2025
Thank you to Aethon Books For an Arc.

I haven't finished this yet but I am about 29% of the way through. A lot has happened in such a short amount of pages but not in the overwhelming way. There is a lot of world building but it happens along side the action. You get to know the main character Oz very well and then it opens up into this much larger world. The opening page reminded me of the opening page of Red Rising. It just stuck out and made you keep reading while giving you a taste for the terrors of being in the Red (applies to both books lol).

I really enjoyed this book. I liked the interesting mix of characters and their motivations. I liked how distinct they were from each other so there was no way to mix them up. I think that Trax might be one of my favorite characters from any book in a long time. For some reason I picture him as an overgrown, more ferocious Randall from Monsters Inc with the personality of Drax from Guardians of the Galaxy. Any conversation with him was entertaining. It is interesting to see the way the people from the Core have just forgotten about the people from the slumps and how even though you might come from another realm, there is still a hierarchy in a place that was looked at as better. I thought the magic system was cool with how you were able to imbue objects with different magic but you have to have that dust of magic to do so. I really appreciated Ox's code and while this wasn't a built out romance, it was acknowledge that some of his actions weren't done just because he liked the pretty girl but because his morals made to where he wasn't a coward.

Even in this first book in the series, there's corruption, adventure, deep friendship and awesome mage duels. Definitely read this.

Full Plot Summary:


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Profile Image for Sharilyn Castaneda.
71 reviews52 followers
November 21, 2025
This book was so fun. A portal fantasy with elemental magic, found family, and political conspiracies that proved to be utterly delightful. So many aspects of this story reminded me of some of my favorite animes & shows (Danmachi, Black Clover, and Avatar) that it was instantly cozy and just the kind of adventure & hijinx I needed. Definitely recommend and can’t wait for book two.
Profile Image for Kristine.
3,472 reviews52 followers
October 23, 2025
I really enjoyed this first book in a brand new series from an author that I already adore.

We get to meet MMC Oz Carnavon who has dreamt for most of his life of becoming a mage. Mr. Correia does a fantastic job of setting up this new world and introducing us to its unique magic system. The world is made up of various realms (there are 7) which are connected to each other by this magical gate that is located in Core City. Core City is at the center of the various realms and the gate has a schedule for letting people move between realms. Oz is from the fire realm and the gate opens to his realm on a particular day each week.

Core City is also the place where all of the magical universities are so Oz comes up with a plan. He has decided to fake his death (so his family is not penalized by his desertion) and plans on sneaking through the gate when it opens in his realm. He then wants to find a way to be accepted into one of the universities so he can finally become a mage. This way, he thinks, he can become wealthy and later go back and free his family from their bonded contracts.

Unfortunately, none of that goes as planned. In fact, it goes as wrong as it could have possibly gone and he finds himself on the run in a foreign realm without any money or any knowledge of how things work.

One of my favorite things about this book were the secondary characters we meet along the way. My absolute favorite was Trax Bloodtrail, a giant fishlike creature who loves to eat people he doesn't like and who can only speak to "certain" people. You have to have a particularly squishy brain to hear him and he speaks by putting images in your brain. Oz has the specific talent of completely understanding him and being able to communicate with him. Trax is adorable and he is trying so hard to understand the "land dweller" people because their customs seem so weird to him.

Trax ends up being the first "outcast" that Oz ends up with as they both start going around to each magical academy to try to get anyone to meet with them and to try to gain admittance. They quickly discover that being admitted to any university is not going to be a possibility.

He is also running from the people trying to capture him for crimes that he did not commit - he definitely has a lot going on.

So, that is how things start and we set off on a wonderful adventure as Oz starts to find friends who are in a similar situation as he is. I absolutely loved this beginning and cannot wait to see what else is in store for this motley crew of characters.
Profile Image for Ty LaPlaunt.
34 reviews18 followers
December 28, 2025
4.25⭐️ this was such a fun book! Really fun characters with clever plot weaving! Cannot wait for book 2.
Profile Image for Matt (Geaux Read Books).
71 reviews21 followers
October 26, 2025
This was a very fun read! If you are looking for a good time with a progression fantasy book that has an interesting elemental magic system and characters that shine, this is the book for you!
Profile Image for Scott Appleton.
Author 18 books58 followers
January 26, 2026
Excellent read. The only thing holding it back is the endless cursing, which cheapens the dialogue and weakens it in places. Otherwise a strong story with great character development.
120 reviews
October 12, 2025
largely unrealised potential

Disappointing. The protagonist was only slightly less useless at the end than he was at the beginning, and the progress he did make was painful follow.

Oh well, always another.
Profile Image for Mitch Schroeder.
124 reviews3 followers
January 15, 2026
DNF. This book is called Academy of Outcasts, but at chapter 20, the main character still isn’t even at the academy. He’s just travelling.

And there’s no supporting cast. No friend, no rival, no mentor, no love interest, literally nobody. Just random people he runs into. 90% of the book has been the main character’s inner monologue, which is just exposition to explain every little detail of this world.

Very boring.
Profile Image for Kyle Modschiedler.
241 reviews131 followers
December 15, 2025
4.5 stars! I had such a blast with this book! I’ll be honest I was kind of expecting to have to work for this one but I was so pleasantly surprised at how easy it was to keep up with everything. There was really good world building and the way that it was written was so easy to follow and the tone of the book was more fun than I was expecting as well! I think that this is one that everyone should check out even if you are intimidated by epic fantasy! These one is good for all levels of epic readers in my opinion!
Profile Image for Zachary.
285 reviews
January 7, 2026
BLUF: Very YA, poor prose, good world and story

This is a complicated review for me. Let's do a version of the compliment sandwich.

The world of Academy of Outcasts is good. Not great; it's portal fantasy with a generic fantasy overlay and likeable characters. If you've played a fantasy video game or TTRPG in the past couple of decades, you're going to be familiar with the tropes Correia uses. A fire plane, death plane, air plane, water plane...all linked to a central 'Core' where a rotating portal allows access to each on a schedule. This has become a trope...The Thirteenth Hour did almost the same thing years ago and I'm sure it's not the only one.

There's a magic system that's interesting though not fully explained; mages attain 'ranks'....how? No clue. These ranks indicate how powerful they are, with a 10 being a master and above that being, like, a super-master, or something. This is where the progression/LitRPG genre has taken us...characters have levels like a video game and progress through them.

Let's get into the negatives my review...the meat of the sandwich, if you will.

The writing is atrocious. I've read, and really like, Correia's MHI and Grimnoir Chronicles. I read the first book of his Saga of the Forgotten Warrior series and, while I didn't continue, the prose was good. This book reads like super YA. Characters are simple, they speak in paragraphs with no physical/visual context given, nothing deeper than uttering words from their mouths, and I honestly thought the MC was an idiot until about the 80% mark. I nearly DNF'd this book several times before it hooked me around the 70% mark. The dialog is difficult to read at times it's so bad:

“Yes, it does, Braden. That’s literally how claims to the throne work. We’ve been over this a hundred times before you got banished.” The noble sighed. “This fucking guy, I swear.”


"I had to pay for a magical healing because a certain cheating dwarf trying to chop my head off, and magical healing enchantments are very expensive.”


“Good. Now I’m taking all your charms, coins, and elements.”
“You’re robbing us?”
“Don’t act all offended. You were stupid, so now you have to pay the stupid tax.”


Those are just a handful of quotes I highlighted, shaking my head each time. I wonder if Correia used a competent editor; there were several improper sentences, missing words, and incorrect words throughout the book.

In addition to the prose, the world is generic. The MC and his people in the Fire plane harvest a material called...Red. The Air plane harvests stuff called...Clear. The Death plane harvest a substance called...Black. The best way I can describe it is this...for those that have been the DM for a TTRPG, and you create this beautiful world with lore and named flora, fauna, reagents, spells, and weapons, and your players, who can't be bothered to remember their own character's names, refer to your finely crafted Germanium Ore, created by the bonding of the blood of the Veracrucis brood with the sapient spores of the local Coranthis metal deposits, as 'dragon metal'. This book is entirely like that...generic names or references for everything, including healing potions, enchantments, reagents, spells, everything. It's like Correia put placeholders in there and then just said "Nah, ship it" during editing. If you're building your own world, why aren't you giving things names more evocative than 'Red'?

More specific, I think I dislike LitRPG and progression fantasy. I've read a few ('Sufficiently Advanced Magic' comes to mind) and I just don't grok why someone wants to put themselves through something that reads like the manual to FF XIV. 'Academy of Outcasts' at least has a plot and characters, but if you, like me, have a distaste for either LitRPG or progression fantasy, stay away.

Returning to the bottom of the sandwich, the characters are the highlight of the book and Correia does an admirable job with them. I said previously that I thought the MC was an idiot until the 80% mark; at that point, I realized he's just young, idealistic, and nice, something you don't find in a lot of characters and certainly not in YA books. There's no brooding, no swooning, no direct romance...this book could have been straight out of someone's D&D campaign. Trax was the highlight; his lack, and misunderstanding, of the human world lead to most of the lighthearted moments in the book. Azarin wasn't especially well written, but provided a focus for Oz. Krachma and Raze were reasonable side kicks that expanded the world, though I'd like to see more detail on both of them (and the parts we saw of Raze were poorly written...one of the quotes above was from his plane and I wanted to through the book/kindle across the room during that scene).

Lastly, *I* enjoyed the book because I actually think it would make an excellent D&D campaign. There's room for adventure, political intrigue, complications, and a long term lurking "greatest evil which had ever been" (direct quote, can't make this shit up). If it's a monetization effort on that front, Correia has done well. Otherwise, I'm gonna hold of judging the whole series until we see some more books.

On that front, I will probably read book 2, if only to see where the story goes. I'm hoping the prose will be tighter, less YA, and the other characters' stories will be expanded.
Profile Image for _sassy_39.
2,613 reviews160 followers
October 29, 2025
"Academy of Outcasts" by Larry Correia is an engrossing and fast-paced read. The story follows Oz Carnavon, a boy from the fire realm who dreams of becoming a master mage. Fascinated by tales of the Seven Realms since childhood, Oz aspires to earn a place in one of the prestigious magical academies in the Core—hoping to pay off his family’s contract and blast Elementals to pieces for fun and profit.

To escape his family’s contract, Oz fakes his own death—but things don’t go according to plan. Soon, he finds himself on the run in a foreign realm. His adventures with Trax Bloodtrail and their struggle to gain entry into the academies make the story even more captivating.

Oz and Trax are my favorite characters. I truly admire the author’s vivid imagination in crafting such a rich and dynamic fantasy world. The narrative is action-packed, with never a dull moment, and it ends on a compelling note that leaves you eager for more.

These characters will linger in my mind for a long time. I can’t wait to get my hands on the next book in the series!
Profile Image for Emmanuel.
104 reviews7 followers
January 9, 2026
I had a strange experience with this one. This book is seemingly written for D&D fans, so the setting is meant to be familiar to them. For me, it felt rather generic. And all those names... I still cannot recall if the protagonist's surname is Caravorn or Carnavorn or else, so I call him Oz Quill, as the book is clearly inspired by "Guardians of the Galaxy". The love interest is Azarin, but you can call her Gamora and pretend she had white skin and blond hair all along. And Drax is also here, but he's a shark-man and takes Rocket's place as Quill's best friend. And he was the redeeming factor of the story for me. It was because of his humor that I endured Oz Quill's Kvothe-like monologues. But the ending was fun and neat, so the journey as a whole was worthwhile.

Maybe next time I'll just rewatch "Guardians of the Galaxy".
Profile Image for Tom Anderson.
33 reviews2 followers
January 4, 2026
4.5 stars. An interesting new series that is kind of a mixture of sci-fi, fantasy, and adventure with just the right amount of levity thrown into the mix. Very fast paced, short chapter, so difficult to put down (“I’ll just read one more chapter before turning in…”.) Pro tip - it is worth the read just to meet Trax Bloodtrail, one of the best characters Larry Correia has ever dreamed up! I’m very much looking forward to the next installment.
Author 16 books141 followers
November 6, 2025
Great read!

I enjoyed the main character's struggle to overcome his situation. Believable struggles set inside a fantastic world. Cool magic as well.
96 reviews4 followers
October 9, 2025
Slow jumbled mess, I stuck it out and finished it. Not worth it…..I like some of the author’s Monster series but this is a hot mess.
Profile Image for Vojtech Sroub.
314 reviews6 followers
January 19, 2026
Larry has created a fairly complex, yet at its core simple, world and magic system. The book also incorporates progressive trend elements, where characters essentially advance along a ladder of abilities and experience, which is a rather popular trope nowadays. We also get plenty of fights, intrigue, heist-style missions, an awakening evil, and quite a few interesting side characters.

Everything is wrapped in a light-hearted tone to keep the story moving quickly, but it is definitely not a parody or an oversimplification.

Characters – The main character is Oz Carnavon, a young fire-element miner from the Fire Sphere. A very stubborn young man who wants to escape his fate—essentially that of a slave—by being accepted into one of the countless magical academies. The only problem is that he has no natural talent for magic whatsoever. Over time, a group of similar “castaways” gathers around him, and together they may manage to start something new. Notable characters include Trax Trailblood, an envoy and monk from the Water Sphere, who is also a massive colossus with a maw full of sharp teeth, and Azarin, a young girl from the Air Sphere who refused an arranged marriage and fled to the Central Sphere to study magic. Her realm is full of giant eagles, which may sound cool—until you realize where they defecate. A gladiator from the Death Sphere also gets a bit of space, along with a few other mostly antagonistic characters who briefly appear. For an opening volume, it’s sufficient.

Worldbuilding – Enormous potential. There is one Central Sphere, from which it is possible, on each day of the week, to travel to a different sphere. These include the Spheres of Fire, Air, and Water, Life and Death, and so on. The Time Sphere is permanently sealed, and the Elves originate from it. The inhabitants of each sphere usually have a natural talent for their own magic and, conversely, one type they are particularly bad at. However, thanks to elemental resources from the spheres, everyone is at least partially capable of using other kinds of magic as well. These elements are therefore actively traded, but also strictly regulated and guarded. After all, we don’t want just any random peasant suddenly training in water, life, and air magic. The combinations are, of course, countless, and the more elements you can wield, the more impressive things you are capable of. All of this, however, is overseen by prestigious magical academies that do not accept just anyone.
It may sound a bit complicated, but in the end it’s incredibly simple and fun.

Story – Oz wants to escape the Fire Sphere, become a great mage, and earn enough to buy out his family’s contracts, which are bound several generations into the future. On top of that, life expectancy in the Fire Sphere is nothing to write home about. Through certain machinations, he does manage to escape to the Central Sphere—unfortunately not as secretly as he had planned. Coincidentally, an assassination attempt is carried out on the Fire Sphere’s ambassador at the exact moment of Oz’s escape. Not only was Oz nearby, but he also has a motive, making him a fugitive in a world he doesn’t know. To make matters worse, in a week’s time an archmage is set to emerge from the Fire portal—and he’ll be coming after Oz. It’s a lot. Half-dead, Oz ends up in a sewer, where Trax is hiding from people and offers to eat him. It would be a shame for Oz’s meat to go to waste. Thus begins a great friendship between two outcasts. Later, they meet the girl Azarin, and together they begin approaching the various academies full of arrogant minds, hoping one of them might accept them. That is the only thing that could guarantee Oz protection from the archmage who will emerge from the portal in a week.

Positives – Excellent worldbuilding. Great pacing after the first third. Strong chemistry between Oz and Trax. Trax as a “foreigner in a foreign land.” Something is always happening; intrigue and surprises alternate at a good pace. The reader wants to know how it all turns out.

Negatives – The first quarter of the book drags noticeably compared to the rest and has a different pace. The beginning strongly resembles Red Rising. One would like to learn much more about the world, but will have to wait for the sequel.
Profile Image for Daniel Shellenbarger.
539 reviews20 followers
October 8, 2025
I'm always happy when Larry Correia starts a new series, it doesn't happen often, and sometimes (*cough* dead 6 *cough*) it doesn't work out, but he's an author who just loves to dial things to eleven, and that means that his books tend to move fast, have lots of action and humor, and an oversize helping of imaginative world-building. In Academy of Outcasts, we follow Oz Carnavon, a young man with a lot of ambition and determination but not much talent. Oz was born in Fogo, the realm of fire, a plane of reality dominated by elemental fire where human life is only possible due to liberal use of enchantments and even then it's a nasty brutal and often short existence. Oz and his family have the misfortune to be indentured servants (*cough* slaves *cough*) of the ruling Argent family and serve aboard one of the many barges which float above the shifting lava-wracked surface of Fogo and mine deposits of Red, which is essential to the practice of fire magic, amidst the deadly heat in the barely solid ground, while avoiding the sorts of dangerous creatures capable of surviving in that hellish environment. One day, Oz has his life saved from certain death by a mage working for the Argents and as a result, he decides that he wants to be a mage, as not only will that give him the power to never have to fear the terrors of Fogo, but also the wealth to free his family from their eternal servitude. The only problem is that he has no talent for magic and his efforts to teach himself nearly end in tragedy. Fortunately for our story, Oz is too stubborn to let a thing like nearly blowing himself up stop him from pursuing his ambition, and his obsession only becomes more intense when tragedy strikes, shattering his family. Oz decides to fake his death and sneak through the portal to Core, the city-world realm that binds all the elemental realms together, where he intends to find an academy to teach him magic and realize his goals... and enable his revenge. However, he soon finds that while the people of the Core don't have to deal with the threat of burning alive every single day, life is far from easy or fair there and not only will no academy have him, but he soon finds himself on the run from the law for a crime he didn't commit and in the crosshairs of a psychotic mage, but he promptly escaped into the Core Underground where he made some friends who work together to solve each other's problems and teach each other what little magic they know, and if you need help and you can find them... (no, no, I'm going to stop the A-Team joke right there).

Anyway, I had a lot of fun reading this; it's got a fun cast of characters, Correia does a nice job of blending magic systems and world-building creating not just the setup for the book's story but a number of meta-problems which are threatening the world in general (on various scales, from "Those Crazies are going to reopen the gate where the monsters live" to the existential/apocalyptic) and tying the reasons for our protagonist's problems to the deeper problems of the world without making it seem forced and without putting our well-meaning but over-his-head protagonist in a position where he's the one actually having to save the world. I thought the power balancing in the story was done very well. Oz isn't just wink-nod "weak" but he's the hero so he can win anyway because plot. He's WEAK and he has to win by relying on allies (ah, the many advantages of having a shark-man friend), playing to strengths other than magic, or by being cleverer than his more powerful enemies, and when confronted by anyone with REAL power, Oz has no chance at all. It reminded me somewhat of Tavi from the earlier Codex Alera books (though Oz DOES have some magical power). All in all, I gave this 4 stars but it's a high 4 stars, like 8.5 of 10, I was very tempted to push it over to 5 stars and I'm eagerly looking forward to the second book coming next spring.
Profile Image for Andy Peloquin.
Author 92 books1,306 followers
October 1, 2025
Full transparency: I’m the Director of Publicity for Aethon Books. However, this review is 100% honest, unbiased, and based solely on my reading experience.

TL;DR Review: Enjoyable from start to finish. Easy reading, a fun adventure flavor, and one of my favorite supporting characters in recent years.

Full Review:
What a fun adventure!
Having read Son of the Black Sword, I went into this expecting similarly dark fantasy. What I got instead was a surprisingly upbeat, optimistic, and enjoyable story that felt exactly like a D&D campaign come to life.
Academy of Outcasts follows Oz, a young miner from the fire elemental plane of Fogo. He is a miner collecting Red, the element that generates fire magic. He believes he has the ability to use Red to do magic, and so he practices in secret to develop his gifts—which very nearly has terrible consequences for all involved. But when a pirate attack threatens the crew of the barge he’s protecting, his magic and ingenuity comes in handy to save the day.
Alas, his parents die in the attack, so he swears himself to A) gaining in magical strength so he can B) get vengeance against the pirate crew. This leads him to escape his home plane and make his way to the central “hub world” where all the magical academies are.
Inevitably, a nobody from the plane of fire has no chance of getting into the prestigious academies. Despite his rejection, he’s got the persistence to keep trying, and the optimism to believe he can succeed though failure seems all but certain. His keeping on leads to all sorts of adventures—assassination attempts, spectacular magical battles, run-ins with cutthroats and slavers, and more—but also leads him to find companions-at-arms.
This is where Academy of Outcasts truly shines. While Oz is an easy enough character to follow—likeable, determined, clever, and dedicated—it’s the supporting characters that really ended up hooking me. Particularly Trax, the shark-like creature that feels like a cross between Reichis from Spellslinger and Bruce from Finding Nemo.
The story moves along at a steady clip, enjoyable from start to finish, and sets up many more adventures ahead. The world was richly detailed but never got bogged down in excessive exposition, lore, history, or culture. Really, it was just a beautifully easy read that kept me reading “just one more chapter” more than once.
If you want something light and easy to get into, or you’re new to fantasy and don’t want an overly complex doorstopper, Academy of Outcasts is a read I definitely recommend for you.

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